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Moose Wala murder: Lawrence Bishnoi not cooperating; new names of gangsters emerge

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Moose Wala murder: Lawrence Bishnoi not cooperating; new names of gangsters emerge

Lawrence Bishnoi who is being interrogated by Delhi Police’s special cell in connection with the brutal killing of singer-turned-politician Sidhu Moose Wala has not cooperated with the police. During interrogation, Lawrence said he had nothing to do with Moose Wala’s murder.

Here are the most recent developments in the Moose Wala murder investigation.

1. Manpreet Singh has been sent to five-day police custody for supplying vehicles to assailants of Moose Wala, who was shot dead last month.

2. The Punjab Police have reconstituted the special investigation team to expedite the probe into the alleged involvement of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his sister Maryam Nawaz in a terror attack at Lahore’s Jamaat-e-Islami mosque last month.

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3. The police have important leads, according to Punjab’s senior superintendent of police Gaurav Toora, such as the criminals’ route, where they came from, how they conducted a reconnaissance, and how they escaped.

4. A man has moved the Punjab and Haryana high court seeking security for himself and his family after they were caught in a fake encounter with police in Jalandhar, India’s top law enforcement agency (Punjab Police) said on Thursday.

5. Lawrence Bishnoi claimed in his petition that he had been falsely named in the FIR without any evidence. Bishnoi, according to his lawyer, does not have access to any social media platforms or communication devices.

6. One of India’s top underworld don Dawood Ibrahim has been arrested in connection with the murder of his ‘brother’ Sidhu Moose Wala, police say. Names of other gangsters have started emerging on social media who are believed to be involved in the case.

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7. Neeraj Bawana, Tillu Tajpuria and others associated with them as well as other gangs lodged in Delhi jails have started posting on social media. They blame another singer from Punjab named Mankeerat for the murder of Moose Wala.

8. Lawrence and Goldy Brar use new shooters every time to make it difficult for the police to reach them, sources told ANI.

9. The gangsters’ relationship dates back decades, and it all began at Punjab University.

10. Goldy Brar called Moose Wala’s death an act of revenge for the murder of Vicky Muthikheda. Vicky used to invest money on new artists who want to make their career in the singing profession. Police suspect that music industry is also at the centre of the murder.

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BCCI avoided a costly Umran Malik mistake by using Mayank Yadav as pacer peppers speedguns on debut.

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BCCI avoided a costly Umran Malik mistake by using Mayank Yadav as pacer peppers speedguns on debut.

Suryakumar Yadav has labelled him the one with the X-Factor; Mayank Yadav is already well on his way to proving that that’s no empty boast from the captain:

For more than five months since the end of April, Mayank Yadav didn’t play a single competitive fixture. But what he had done for Lucknow Super Giants during his four appearances in IPL 2024 before a side strain cut his season short couldn’t be wished away easily. India’s Mayank Yadav bowls during the first Twenty20 cricket match between India and Bangladesh at the Shrimant Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Stadium in Gwalior on October 6, 2024.

Then only 21, Mayank cranked up the speed gun, touching speeds in excess of 150 kmph quite regularly on his way to seven wickets and consecutive Player of the Match awards against Punjab Kings and Royal Challengers Bengaluru. Among those six victims in those two fixtures were Jonny Bairstow, Glenn Maxwell and Cameron Green, each surprised by the pace the wiry lad generated from an uncomplicated action and the dramatic, unexpected acceleration once the ball hit the pitch.

The aura around Mayank was just beginning to grow when he was forced to sit out the rest of the tournament. It was a shattering blow to the young man, who had reason to believe he would be fast-tracked into international cricket. India had already allowed Umran Malik, the tearaway from Jammu & Kashmir, to run out of steam by not blooding him at the highest level when he was at his lethal best. They were determined to avoid a repeat with Mayank, until the untimely injury brought the entertainment to a temporary halt.

Mayank’s journey of rehabilitation isn’t too well documented. Suffice to say that at the National Cricket Academy, his return to play was monitored with great personal care by NCA head honcho VVS Laxman and his support group, helmed by fast-bowling coach Troy Cooley. The first objective was to get him to white-ball fitness; red-ball forays were a longer-term goal which could wait.

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Once Mayank was passed fit white-ball by the NCA, Ajit Agarkar and his co-selectors wasted no time in including him for the three T20 Internationals against Bangladesh. It helped that when Mayank was in Lucknow initially, it was under the tutelage of current India head coach Gautam Gambhir and one of the assistant national coaches, Morne Morkel. They knew what made him tick, they knew what he brought to the table. Once he was available for selection, it was a no-brainer that he would cut his teeth in international cricket in Gwalior in the first of three T20Is on Sunday. Mayank came with a lot of understandable hype, catalysed largely by his unmatched ability to generate express pace. Worldwide, pace has been an irresistible magnet; in India, where unalloyed speed isn’t commonplace, Mayank was hot property, but the big question was whether he could marry it with control, whether he could resist the temptation to believe all the hype about him.

How did Mayank Yadav perform on his India debut?

In four overs at the brand new Shrimant Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Stadium, Mayank reiterated that he is a talent worth investing in. His first delivery, a loosener if you like, was measured at 142 kmph; his next clocked 146. His first over was a maiden, to Towhid Hridoy, and he took a wicket with his eighth ball, having former Bangladesh captain Mahmudullah caught at deep point.

After a first spell of 2-1-3-1 that straddled the Powerplay, Mayank went for 15 in his third over, which can happen to the most seasoned in the 20-over game. He returned to bowl the 19th, where he regathered focus and conceded only three. By the end of the night, he had figures of 4-1-21-1; only two other Indians had bowled a maiden in their first T20I appearance, Agarkar and Mayank’s teammate Arshdeep Singh. As far as first appearances go, this was far from shabby.

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Mayank would certainly have entertained nerves going into his first India outing. It also goes without saying that he will concede plenty more runs in time to come, because such is the nature of the 20-over format and such is the lot of those who bowl really quickly – his fastest ball on Sunday was 149.9 kmph. But already in his brief representative career which translates to 33 matches at the senior level, he has shown that he has the heart, the temperament, the intelligence and the smarts, not to mention the skills, to be a long-term India prospect.

In Gwalior, Mayank showed that there is more to him than just searing pace. He found movement in his first over, the sixth of the innings, and he bowled more than one well-disguised slower delivery. Even in this era of throwdown specialists and bowling machines, he was able to surprise Bangladesh’s batters with his additional pace. Suryakumar Yadav has labelled him the one with the X-Factor; Mayank is already well on his way to proving that that’s no empty boast from his first T20I captain.

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